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How to Avoid the Sneakiest Sources of BPA

Guest Blogger
Saturday, February 06, 2010

JENNIFER GRAYSON, Founding Editor of The Red, White and Green:  For those concerned about serious health conditions (breast and prostate cancer, sexual development abnormalities, and now heart disease) linked to packaging additive bisphenol A (BPA), there's promising news:  Earlier this month, the FDA reversed its stance on the chemical, saying it is now "taking reasonable steps to reduce human exposure to BPA in the food supply." It's a monumental first step, as is the move by cities and states around the country to ban the suspected endocrine disruptor from baby products like formula cans and sippy cups. It could still be years, though, before we see BPA removed from thousands of other products on the market -- including those canned soups that you enjoy every day for lunch (more on that later).

What has upset me most about the BPA issue is that we consumers haven't been granted the knowledge to decide for ourselves whether or not we want to buy products that are packaged with it. As with genetically modified foods, it's a consumer guessing game: To date, there are still no labeling requirements for thousands of industrial chemicals like BPA that turn up in our food stuffs and packaging. Of course, there's calorie, fat, and sodium information clearly printed on the package of every last Keebler cookie, but say you want to know if there's a toxic chemical in your can of bean soup that could to lead to breast cancer? Forget it folks, you're on your own.

Well, not any longer. Stick to these tips, and eliminate even the sneakiest sources of BPA from your diet.

Swap out your soup. A recent Consumer Reports test found BPA in 19 name-brand foods; the highest levels were in canned soup, including Campbell's chicken noodle -- not the therapeutic effect you want for someone fighting off a cold. I've since switched to Dr. McDougall's BPA-free soups packaged in FSC-certified cartons, or I make my own from scratch. Which brings me to my next tip...

Beware the beans. Don't reach for canned beans to whip up that batch of black bean chili, unless you're going to buy Eden Organic -- amazingly, the only brand on the market to use BPA-free cans. Westbrae Natural, for instance, says on its website that the lining of its cans is "a type of food-grade epoxy...the simplest earth friendly coating available." But, it was revealed in a follow-up phone call that its cans do, in fact, contain trace amounts of BPA. Dried beans are a safe bet, plus they're considerably cheaper.

Toss the tomatoes and tuna. You may love making pasta sauce from scratch, but even that innocent looking little can of tomato paste likely has BPA lurking in its lining. All the more reason to plant your own tomatoes, or check out the Bionaturae brand of tomato paste, which comes in a nifty little glass jar. Canned tuna, and even my favorite health food, sardines, aren't safe either. You can find tuna in glass as well, though it's pricey (but thanks to the mercury content, you shouldn't be eating it that often anyway).

Gossip, don't drink at, the water cooler. It's been well publicized that polycarbonate water bottles leach BPA, which is why Nalgene phased it out of its sports bottles. But how many of you have reached for the office water cooler to fill up your Kleen Kanteen, or have bottled water delivery at home because you think the water is "safer" than tap? Surprise -- those cooler bottles are made from the same BPA-laden No. 7 plastic that was used for the original Nalgene bottles. Invest in a water filtration system or switch to a Brita pitcher, which is BPA-free.



Ditch the Diet Coke. And the regular Coke. And the Pepsi, Sprite, Fanta, Mountain Dew, and any other soda or energy drink that comes in a can, while you're at it (as if you needed more motivation to stop guzzling liquid candy, anyway): A study last year by Health Canada found that the majority of soft drinks contain BPA. If you have to get your pop fix, at least enjoy it the old-fashioned way: in a glass bottle.

Protect those pearly whites. If you wind up at the dentist with a cavity thanks to all that soda pop, make sure you ask about the sealant he's using -- there is evidence that some dental sealants may contribute to BPA exposure.

Canners, be cautious. One of the surest ways to minimize BPA exposure is to favor fresh fruits and vegetables over canned goods like tomatoes, since BPA is found in nearly all can linings. And what better way to enjoy fresh produce than to plant your own garden? It's a cruel irony, however, that gardeners looking to preserve a bumper crop of beets may unknowingly be using BPA-laden home canning products: Jarden Home Brands uses BPA in the manufacture of its lids for Ball and Kerr jars. For a BPA-free option, take a look at the Weck canning jars with glass lids that are popular in Europe.

No receipt, thank you. Amazingly, the greatest threat of BPA exposure may be something we handle nearly every day: receipts. According to the Warner Babcock Institute for Green Chemistry's John Warner in a Science News article last year, "The average cash register receipt that's out there and uses the BPA technology will have 60 to 100 milligrams of free BPA." Milligrams? By comparison, the amount deemed worrisome enough by reusable water bottle manufacturer Nalgene to eliminate the chemical from its polycarbonate bottles was measured in nanograms (that's one-millionth of a milligram).

What's especially scary about the receipt scenario is that there's no way to control all the possibilities for exposure -- picture waiters delivering plates of food after handling customers' checks, or shaking hands with someone who just put a receipt in his wallet. What you can control: Decline a receipt if you don't need one (save more trees, too), and wash your hands frequently (good hygiene during flu season, anyway).

Eat that pizza at the parlor. Thanks to all those BPA-laced receipts, those pizzas you order in for movie night may also be tainted, courtesy of the recycled cardboard pizza boxes they were delivered in. Surprise: The BPA doesn't magically disappear when those receipts are recycled into other paper products. (Another source of the BPA in those pizza boxes is recycled newspaper, since newspaper ink also contains BPA.) I'm not saying we should do away with pizza boxes made from recycled materials, since the environmental damage from not saving all those trees would be arguably greater than the minimal, if any, exposure to BPA from the average pepperoni pie; but if you're the type who has Domino's on speed dial, you might want to consider stopping by your local pizza joint once in a while for a slice or two at the counter.

Bottle for beer, you're in the clear. If you do wind up having that pizza delivered, at least make sure that the six-pack you serve with it is BPA-free by choosing bottled beer over cans. It's true that the majority of canned soda pop contains BPA, but beer poses even more of a risk, due to the high solubility of BPA in alcohol. Wine isn't a completely safe choice, either: BPA is also found in the epoxy linings of some wine vats used during fermentation. Short of contacting the vineyard, making your own wine, or becoming a teetotaler, there's no way to avoid this exposure, unfortunately (take comfort in the fact that the French drink four times the wine that Americans do, and live, on average, 3.5 years longer).

With BPA having seemingly infiltrated the most benign of objects, it's easy to adopt a "screw it, we're all screwed" mentality. But my goal here is not to make you an obsessive hand washer who runs screaming at the sight of a pizza box; it's to highlight just how pervasive the chemical has become, and how important it is that we consumers stand up and demand action. If a 165-pound man can consume 80 times the "safe" amount of BPA from one serving of canned green beans, then what disastrous health effects are we putting ourselves at risk for once you factor in the soup cans, the polycarbonate bottles, the soda pop, and the credit card receipts?

Remember: When in doubt, ask. Even companies implying that they offer BPA-free products can't be trusted, as so many of us learned when reusable water bottle maker Sigg came clean last year about the BPA in its liners. And if it turns out that BPA is in the product of the company you're contacting, don't be afraid to say that you'll no longer be buying that product. Until the laws change, consumer demand is the only leverage we have.

 

 

Jennifer Grayson, Founding Editor of The Red, White, and Green and Miss Eco-Etiquette for the Huffington Post.  Send all your eco-inquiries to Jennifer Grayson at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address). Questions may be edited for length and clarity. Follow Jennifer Grayson on Twitter.

This blog was originally published on the Huffington Post as a two part series (Part 1, Part 2) and was edited with permission.

 

Image Courtesy of iampeas / CC BY-SA 2.0

 

 

The opinions expressed here are solely those of the author and not necessarily those of Healthy Child Healthy World. 

 

 

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Posted by Stephanie  on  08/13/2011  at  06:05 PM

Also toilet paper has BPA in it.  I switched my family to washable baby wipes. You spend a lot less money and you never have to carry those oddly shaped packages!  I know this may be extreme for most but remember as the little Charmin bear says “there are pieces left behind.”  I don’t want to be faced with cancer in THAT place!

Posted by kate  on  07/12/2011  at  04:22 AM

wow, there are definitely a lot of things on this list that I hadn’t thought about. Cans of pop! and Beer cans! yikes!!

Here in Canada all baby products have already been banned if they contain BPA.  I was surprised to hear that the US is still behind us on that one.

Posted by murrieta dentist  on  02/22/2011  at  05:31 PM

After reading your post this is something that I will pay more attention to when shopping next time.  Always a good idea to be well informed when it comes to your health.

Posted by Fish Oil Side Effects  on  02/01/2011  at  12:52 PM

I’m a big tuna consumer, like Water Clue, so I’m going to have to think on that. Although, is this just in the US or in Europe as well? I guess so, because the tuna is in cans here as well.

I had no idea about the receipts. That is a total eyeopener, and I will definitely start eating my pizzas at the parlor, ha!

Thanks for the info.

Posted by Ingela  on  01/13/2011  at  10:20 AM

Wow. That is a wake up call about the BPA being absorbed from receipts and newspaper.

Thanks a lot for writing this!

Posted by Water Clue  on  09/08/2010  at  12:37 PM

I really had no idea that canned food would have imparted BPA additive as well. I am a frequent tuna consumer, and as most of them are canned, I might have to reconsider that and maybe find an alternative. I think what many people don’t realize is that even office plastic water bottles used for keeping distilled drinking water also do contain BPA, something not many are so aware of. So usually I just try to use glass jars or containers if I can.

Posted by Janelle Sorensen  on  04/12/2010  at  10:19 AM

Janine - Frozen vegetables are most often packaged in LDPE plastic, which is considered a safer plastic. Plastic baggies are often made from LDPE as well, but you’ll have to check with the manufacturer to be sure. While you should be okay freezing food in LDPE bags, we would not recommend using them for fatty or acidic foods and you should always let foods cool down before putting them in any type of plastic (heat promotes leaching). The safest option is freezer-safe glass or stainless steel.

Posted by Janine  on  04/07/2010  at  07:36 PM

Anyone know anything about frozen vegetables? Soups are hard to avoid but I go about 50/50 with stuff that comes in canned and frozen varieties.

How about plastic baggies? What is safe to freeze food in?

Posted by Jacek Argasinski  on  02/24/2010  at  08:41 AM

Nice informative post!

Posted by MRochell  on  02/11/2010  at  05:48 PM

Oh my goodness, I had no idea that BPA can be absorbed from receipts!  And newspapers!!  Thank you so much for sharing this.  More people are becoming aware of these problems now which is a very good thing.  Thank you for providing this kind of much needed education!

Posted by Rachel  on  02/11/2010  at  02:51 PM

Laura, I’ve also considered buying the “pouched” tuna and salmon, because we so miss the occasional tuna sandwich.  I resist because the pouches are made of aluminum foil.  I know that, in general, aluminum is not a healthy metal to put in contact with food.  So, since the tuna is stored in the pouches for so long, I don’t feel wise eating it that way either :(.

Posted by Janelle Sorensen  on  02/08/2010  at  12:48 PM

Check out this great guide to BPA-free canned foods:
http://www.re-nest.com/re-nest/food-and-cooking/product-guide-bpafree-canned-foods-107985

Posted by Laura Cooley  on  02/06/2010  at  02:06 PM

This is so disappointing to read.  Thank you for pointing out where the sources are.  I find myself wondering pouches that tuna and salmon come in if that is better than canned.

Posted by surviving and thriving on pennies  on  02/06/2010  at  11:21 AM

Wow, I thought I was doing good. I used canned tomato’s about 2 times a month. Guess that’s out the door.  We just had pizza (once a month maybe thing) delivered. No more.  And I’m also guilty of the receipts but who isn’t?  How the heck can we avoid this one? Everything else I’m good with because I make my own beans and freeze them. NO canned food if at all possible. Gonna have to start being more diligent. Thanks for the eye opening!

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